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单词 historiography
释义

Definition of historiography in English:

historiography

noun hɪˌstɒrɪˈɒɡrəfihɪˌstɔːrɪˈɒɡrəfihɪˌstɔriˈɑɡrəfi
mass noun
  • 1The study of the writing of history and of written histories.

    历史编纂学,史学

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Needless to say, recalling this episode in the historiography of German Renaissance studies is not to validate it.
    • To overcome the objections raised by analytic philosophy and secular historiography, apologetics needs to shift its ground.
    • The purpose of this essay is to write a subversive historiography of polka.
    • These features have interesting parallels with accounting history and historiography.
    • It is doubtful, however, that Edwards' work would have anticipated modern historiography as some claim.
    • Plato is an especially fruitful figure for application of rhetorical approaches to historiography and interpretation.
    • From where a historian speaks or writes may impact historiography as much as when one speaks.
    • But it serves as a reminder of several points relating to history, historiography, and the current Indian situation.
    • Although there are other facets of the history and historiography of Islamic iconoclasm that merit analysis, my aim here is twofold.
    • They view the historical past only through the eyes of historians, history as pre-packaged by historiography.
    • When he went to study in Britian the dominant theme of nationalist historiography was the study of plantation societies in the Caribbean.
    • Together, they amount to a substantial critique of the history and historiography of witchcraft, sexuality and religion in early modern Europe.
    • His Iberian study also serves to exemplify advances in medieval research and historiography since the series' predecessor.
    • But Tacitus did not write according to the canons of modern historiography.
    • Early medieval Christianity has a bad odour in modern historiography.
    • Written histories always become historiography; all history is historiography.
    • As the Middle Ages continued, rhetoric stayed present in historiography, but other elements began to emerge.
    • Well, like a bad remake of The Paper Chase, I found myself in a required humanities seminar on historiography.
    • The other founding father of modern historiography is the French medievalist Marc Bloch, author of The Historian's Craft.
    • The real abyss separating Deutscher from modern historiography is a moral one.
    1. 1.1 The writing of history.
      撰史,编史
      Example sentencesExamples
      • This collection of essays on history and historiography by the American historian was first published in 1987.
      • Koyre's idealist historiography of science reinforced the postpositivist tendency to assimilate the history of science to the history of ideas.
      • If for no other reason, many scholars may have been intimidated by a historiography written largely in Dutch.
      • Modern Basque historiography blames the monarchy of Navarre for failing to integrate the particularities of the local legal system.
      • Although he was writing about literature, Steiner's words apply equally to historiography.
      • Clete Daniel has now filled in this gap in the historiography with his beautifully written new book, Culture of Misfortune.
      • It's a very thoughtful stab at a new kind of urban historiography - a contemporary, subjective, visual way of writing a city's history.
      • Barker researched the novel at various libraries in Great Britain and pieced together this historiography using both fact and fiction.
      • What is the relationship between historiography and the writing of historical novels?

Derivatives

  • historiographer

  • noun hɪˌstɔːrɪˈɒɡrəfəhɪˌstɒrɪˈɒɡrəfəhɪˌstɔriˈɑɡrəfər
    • History, the great historiographer Fernand Braudel once said, is ‘a web of problems… a fleeting spectacle ’.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • It is Jenkins's more radical conclusions that pose stumbling blocks for historiographers such as Evans.
      • The ruling historiographers of science cannot be freed from the reproach that they have read Galileo's writings too selectively.
      • Wittenberg is an expert historiographer, making this book an outstanding addition to studies of generalship in the Civil War's final campaigns.
      • Patricia's ‘free and insightful’ interpretation of facts is essential to the historiographer openly seeking a fresh viewpoint on old ideas.
  • historiographic

  • adjective hɪˌstɒrɪɒɡrəˈɡrafɪkhɪˌstɔːrɪɒɡrəˈɡrafɪk
    • The historiographic can now only thrive in these interstitial spaces.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The importance of this effort, as the contributors show, is not exclusively historical or historiographic.
      • And here again, I think it's time to reiterate my plea for the historiographic interpretation of continuing characters.
      • Domination, submission, and re-achievement of domination marks their historiographic trajectory.
      • My fourth methodological move offers a historiographic practice to feminist rhetorical studies.
  • historiographical

  • adjective hɪˌstɔːrɪəˈɡrafɪk(ə)lhɪˌstɒrɪəˈɡrafɪk(ə)lhɪˌstɔriəˈɡræfək(ə)l
    • The analysis stops there, though, leaving the reader to assess the possible contradictions between historiographical and ideological goals.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The two best known are, of course, Wolsey and More, figures whose profile has been substantially skewed by historiographical spin.
      • They appeal too much to the respectability of historiographical standards.
      • This is strange, because it directly conflicts with a second major element in his historiographical outlook.
      • How can we raise a secure and objective historiographical edifice on such flimsy foundations?
  • historiographically

  • adverb
    • People can certainly appreciate music without analyzing it intellectually and historiographically.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Both personally and historiographically, they seemed to constitute a ‘third sex.’
      • The selections in this volume fail to convey that richness either historiographically or situationally.
      • Foucault carefully avoids being so historiographically simplistic.
      • Remarkable though it seems, these matters have not been written properly into the record, historiographically speaking, until now.

Origin

Mid 16th century: via medieval Latin from Greek historiographia, from historia 'narrative, history' + -graphia 'writing'.

Rhymes

autobiography, bibliography, biography, cardiography, cartography, chirography, choreography, chromatography, cinematography, cosmography, cryptography, demography, discography, filmography, geography, hagiography, hydrography, iconography, lexicography, lithography, oceanography, orthography, palaeography (US paleography), photography, radiography, reprography, stenography, topography, typography

Definition of historiography in US English:

historiography

nounhiˌstôrēˈäɡrəfēhɪˌstɔriˈɑɡrəfi
  • 1The study of historical writing.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • His Iberian study also serves to exemplify advances in medieval research and historiography since the series' predecessor.
    • But Tacitus did not write according to the canons of modern historiography.
    • Although there are other facets of the history and historiography of Islamic iconoclasm that merit analysis, my aim here is twofold.
    • Plato is an especially fruitful figure for application of rhetorical approaches to historiography and interpretation.
    • Well, like a bad remake of The Paper Chase, I found myself in a required humanities seminar on historiography.
    • It is doubtful, however, that Edwards' work would have anticipated modern historiography as some claim.
    • The other founding father of modern historiography is the French medievalist Marc Bloch, author of The Historian's Craft.
    • The real abyss separating Deutscher from modern historiography is a moral one.
    • But it serves as a reminder of several points relating to history, historiography, and the current Indian situation.
    • They view the historical past only through the eyes of historians, history as pre-packaged by historiography.
    • Together, they amount to a substantial critique of the history and historiography of witchcraft, sexuality and religion in early modern Europe.
    • From where a historian speaks or writes may impact historiography as much as when one speaks.
    • To overcome the objections raised by analytic philosophy and secular historiography, apologetics needs to shift its ground.
    • When he went to study in Britian the dominant theme of nationalist historiography was the study of plantation societies in the Caribbean.
    • The purpose of this essay is to write a subversive historiography of polka.
    • These features have interesting parallels with accounting history and historiography.
    • As the Middle Ages continued, rhetoric stayed present in historiography, but other elements began to emerge.
    • Early medieval Christianity has a bad odour in modern historiography.
    • Written histories always become historiography; all history is historiography.
    • Needless to say, recalling this episode in the historiography of German Renaissance studies is not to validate it.
    1. 1.1 The writing of history.
      撰史,编史
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Koyre's idealist historiography of science reinforced the postpositivist tendency to assimilate the history of science to the history of ideas.
      • Modern Basque historiography blames the monarchy of Navarre for failing to integrate the particularities of the local legal system.
      • Clete Daniel has now filled in this gap in the historiography with his beautifully written new book, Culture of Misfortune.
      • Barker researched the novel at various libraries in Great Britain and pieced together this historiography using both fact and fiction.
      • This collection of essays on history and historiography by the American historian was first published in 1987.
      • What is the relationship between historiography and the writing of historical novels?
      • It's a very thoughtful stab at a new kind of urban historiography - a contemporary, subjective, visual way of writing a city's history.
      • If for no other reason, many scholars may have been intimidated by a historiography written largely in Dutch.
      • Although he was writing about literature, Steiner's words apply equally to historiography.

Origin

Mid 16th century: via medieval Latin from Greek historiographia, from historia ‘narrative, history’ + -graphia ‘writing’.

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更新时间:2024/10/19 19:36:22